A8 OREGON East Oregonian Saturday, June 18, 2022 Critics fear restrictions with new wildfi re map By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press SA LEM — Oregon forestry offi cials are bracing for controversy after approv- ing statewide hazard ratings that encompass up to 300,000 properties with elevated risk of wildfi res. Many of those tracts are expected to face new defen- sible space and building code requirements under “wild- land-urban interface” crite- ria recently enacted by the Oregon Board of Forestry. Critics anticipate the two regulatory actions will result in sweeping and unworkable restrictions for rural commu- nities when a map of aff ected areas is released later this month. Blowback from rural residents against the new requirements is expected by the state forestry offi cials due to objections they’ve encoun- tered during the rule-making process. “We have to recognize there will be people and orga- nizations that will continue to push against this and attempt to embarrass the department and related agencies,” said Jim Kelly, the board’s chair, during a recent meeting. “It will enter into the governor’s race and all that. I think we all need to be prepared.” The Oregon Department of Forestry received roughly twice as many comments opposed to the mapping regime than in favor of it, mostly because people thought the wildland-urban interface was too expansive, said Tim Holschbach, the agency’s fi re prevention and policy manager. The agency will send out written notices to 250,000- 300,000 landowners aff ected by the rules. They can appeal their classifi cations if they’re subject to regulation, he said. Periodic audits will review the eff ectiveness of the rules, which can continue to be modifi ed. As the rollout of the wild- fi re map gets underway, ODF realizes it will be in a “fi sh bowl” of public scrutiny and it expects that revisions will be necessary, said Mike Shaw, the agency’s fi re chief. “The agency’s work is “national best practices.” However, the Far m Bureau and other critics believe the board’s WUI criteria are nonetheless overly broad. The vast acre- age likely included in the designation will leave people “shocked,” said Lauren Smith, the group’s director of government and national aff airs. “Our legislators will be very surprised when they start getting constituent calls,” she said. “When you get a WUI that is nearly the size of the State of Oregon, it sort of defeats the purpose.” Properties will be subject to regulation only if they’re both within the WUI and have a hazard rating of “high” or “extreme” wildfi re risk. Roughly 250,000-300,000 properties fall into the “high” and “extreme” risk catego- ries, but ODF doesn’t yet have an estimate of how many are also in the WUI. The Farm Bureau expects a great deal of overlap, which will have a drastic eff ect on rural areas, Smith said. “You’ll see large swaths Stayton Fire District/Contributed Photo, File The Oregon Department of Forestry has approved map- ping rules that critics fear will cause over-regulation of rural properties. not done. The work will continue through this year. We know we’re not going to be perfect,” Shaw said. “There will be adjustments in the future. This is a great fi rst step.” The Oregon Farm Bureau has worried about adverse impacts to agriculture since lawmakers began negotiat- ing comprehensive wildfi re legislation last year. The Legislature ended up passing Senate Bill 762, which the Farm Bureau crit- icized for its “top-down” approach to wildfire miti- gation. The group favored a “bottom-up” strategy of consulting with rural communities proposed in another bill. To get the bill over the fi nish line, lawmakers elim- inated SB 762’s defi nition of wildland-urban interface, or WUI, and instead directed the Board of Forestry to set the parameters based on of entire communities pulled into high or extreme risk WUI,” she said. “There’s a lot of regulation going on focused on this map and all these rural communities, and not a lot of representation by them.” The defensible space regulations require fi re-prone fuels to be cleared from 50-100 feet around certain structures, depending on the hazard rating. It’s not yet clear that cultivated cropland will be excluded from that require- ment, with the matter currently being considered by Gov. Kate Brown’s Wild- fi re Council, Smith said. It’s also unknown whether the requirement will apply to rural facilities, such as small hydroelectric plants. “Nobody has been able to answer those questions,” she said. The State Fire Marshal’s Offi ce has exempted agricul- tural buildings uninhabited by people from the defensi- ble space rules for vegeta- tive fuels, though the Farm Bureau fears that could change under new leadership. May unemployment dropped to 3.6% By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau SALEM — The addition of 6,200 jobs in May drove Oregon’s unemployment rate down a notch from 3.7% to 3.6%, matching the national average. The Oregon Employ- ment Department, which released its monthly report on Wednesday, also said that Oregon’s labor force partic- ipation during May grew to 63.5%. The national aver- age was 62.3%. Oregon has climbed back from a low of 59.2% in April 2020. The participation rate is a measure of how many people are working or looking for work. Anna Johnson, a senior economic analyst for the department, said Oregon has regained 90% of the jobs lost during the pandemic, compared with 96% nation- wide. “Oregon had another month of solid job gains in May,” she said in a video announcement. “The labor market is still going really strong in Oregon.” The May unemployment rate is close to Oregon’s modern record low of 3.4%, which prevailed in each of the four months from November 2019 through February 2020. The rate shot up to a record adjusted high of 13.2% at the onset of the coronavirus pandemic in April 2020 but has since dropped. Oregon recorded 2.13 million people in the labor force in May. The gain of 6,200 from April was in line with the average overall gain of 6,000 during the previous six months. Gains during May were recorded in leisure and hospi- tality, 3,200 jobs; transpor- tation, warehousing and utilities, 1,300; wholesale trade, 900; and manufactur- ing, 800. Construction lost 1,000 jobs. According to the report, Oregon’s economy added 82,700 nonfarm jobs in the past 12 months, a gain of 4.4%. The leisure and hospi- tality sector grew by 17.2% with 29,400 jobs, and private educational services by 9.3% with 3,000 jobs. Construc- tion, wholesale trade, profes- sional and business services and manufacturing each saw job growth around 5%. Josh O’Connor/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Sen. Ron Wyden asked the leaders of several federal agencies for more information on how each will spend money on prevention and growing the wildland fi refi ghter workforce. Firefi ghter shortage raises concerns Offi cials say 1 in 5 wildland fi refi ghter jobs are unfi lled By ALEX BAUMHARDT Oregon Capital Chronicle WA SH I N GT ON — Oregon faces a shortage of wildland firefighters that could be “a recipe for trou- ble,” according to U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden. Wyden wrote to U.S. Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland and U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack recently with concerns that their agencies weren’t prepared to handle another catastrophic fi re season such as that of 2020 and 2021. He said one out of five wildland fi refi ghter jobs in Oregon and Washington stand empty, depleting the ranks of those tasked with containing and quelling wild- fi res. The wildland fi refi ght- ing program for the region is currently staff ed at 1,840 fi re- fi ghters, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The agency considers 2,281 to be fully staff ed. “Oregon is still struggling to build after two back-to- back horrifi c fi re seasons,” Wyden wrote. He said the federal agencies have access to more money for wildfi re prevention and fi ghting than ever before with the passage of the Infrastructure Invest- ment and Jobs Act in Novem- ber, which included $600 million to boost fi refi ghter wages nationwide and $8 billion for states to mitigate wildfi re risk. “ You r de p a r t me nt s received this much needed support. Now, more than six months after being given this new fl exibility, we are past time for action,” Wyden said. He asked for an update on how funds had been distrib- uted so far, how funding amounts to each region of the country were determined and how many acres the U.S. Forest Service would treat in Oregon, such as getting rid of dead and dying debris in federal forests. Repre- sentatives from Wyden’s offi ce said he has not had a response from either Haaland or Vilsack to his June 7 letter. At a June 9 meeting with “THEY DO DESERVE BETTER PAY, THEY DESERVE BETTER BENEFITS, THEY DESERVE BETTER CARE IN TERMS OF MENTAL AND PHYSICAL HEALTH CONDITIONS OUT THERE.” — Randy Moore, U.S. Forest Service Chief the U.S. Forest Service Chief Randy Moore, Wyden further pressed for informa- tion on where federal money was going, and when Oregon would be receiving greater federal help with wildfire prevention, management and fi refi ghter shortages. About half of Oregon belongs to the federal govern- ment, which has so far allo- cated $39 million to the state to spend over fi ve years for wildfi re prevention under the infrastructure bill. For wildfire preven- tion, Moore said the Forest Service will treat vegeta- tion on 20 million acres of national forests over the next 10 years, and collaborate with other local and state agencies and tribes to treat 30 million more. “Our plan is to look at 50 million acres within this time frame in order to make a diff erence on how that fi re is behaving across, particularly, the West,” he told Wyden. On workforce shortages, Wyden laid out the extent of the need. “Western states are actu- ally trying to borrow fire- fighters from each other,” Wyden said to Moore. Wyden said that fi refi ghters he spoke with in Oregon universally wanted better pay. “We already see these ‘help wanted’ signs off ering much better pay in various other positions,” Wyden said. “Given the billions of dollars Congress provided in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act, particularly for forestry, the question from Oregonians is obvious — how is the depart- ment going to use that money to fi x this shortage of perma- nent wildland fi re positions?” Since the federal infra- structure bill was passed, firefighters have not seen promised wage increases, Wyden said. Jaelith Hall-R ivera, deputy Forest Service chief of state and private forestry, said in a June 7 note updat- ing federal fi refi ghters that increased pay is coming in the next few weeks. The fi re- fi ghters will receive retroac- tive payments for pay raises dating to last October. Last summer, President Joe Biden raised entry-level wages for federal fi refi ghters from $13 to $15 an hour. “They do deserve better pay, they deserve better benefi ts, they deserve better care in terms of mental and physical health conditions out there,” Moore said. CHOOSE FROM 12 OF YOUR FAVORITE NEW 2022 TOYOTA MODELS CAMRY, CAMRY HYBRID, COROLLA, COROLLA HYBRID, HIGHLANDER, HIGHLANDER HYBRID, RAV4, RAV4 HYBRID, TACOMA, TUNDRA & TUNDRA HYBRID % 2.75 60 APR FINANCING WITH $ 17.86 PER $ 1,000 BORROWED MO. TUNDRA TACOMA HIGHLANDER RAV4 TOYOTA.COM See Your Local Toyota Dealer * Excludes Tacoma TRD Pro models. Prototypes shown with options. Extra-cost colors shown. Offers end 5/31/2022. APR on approved credit from Toyota Financial Services. 2.75% APR financing for 60 months with $17.86 per $1,000 borrowed. Annual Percentage Rate available to buyers with approved Tier 1+ through Tier 1(excellent) credit. All offers subject to approved credit, see dealer for more information. 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